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© 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-1 Object-Oriented Design we can extend our discussion of the design of classes and objects focus on:

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Presentation on theme: "© 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-1 Object-Oriented Design we can extend our discussion of the design of classes and objects focus on:"— Presentation transcript:

1 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-1 Object-Oriented Design we can extend our discussion of the design of classes and objects focus on:  software development activities  determining the classes and objects that are needed for a program  the relationships that can exist among classes  the static modifier  writing interfaces  the design of enumerated type classes  method design and method overloading  GUI design and layout managers

2 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-2 Outline Software Development Activities Identifying Classes and Objects Static Variables and Methods Class Relationships Interfaces Enumerated Types Revisited Method Design Testing GUI Design and Layout

3 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-3 Program Development The creation of software involves four basic activities:  establishing the requirements  creating a design  implementing the code  testing the implementation These activities are not strictly linear – they overlap and interact

4 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-4 Requirements Software requirements specify the tasks that a program must accomplish  what to do, not how to do it Often an initial set of requirements is provided, but they should be critiqued and expanded It is difficult to establish detailed, unambiguous, and complete requirements Careful attention to the requirements can save significant time and expense in the overall project

5 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-5 Design A software design specifies how a program will accomplish its requirements That is, a software design determines:  how the solution can be broken down into manageable pieces  what each piece will do An object-oriented design determines which classes and objects are needed, and specifies how they will interact Low level design details include how individual methods will accomplish their tasks

6 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-6 Implementation Implementation is the process of translating a design into source code Novice programmers often think that writing code is the heart of software development, but actually it should be the least creative step Almost all important decisions are made during requirements and design stages Implementation should focus on coding details, including style guidelines and documentation

7 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-7 Testing Testing attempts to ensure that the program will solve the intended problem under all the constraints specified in the requirements A program should be thoroughly tested with the goal of finding errors Debugging is the process of determining the cause of a problem and fixing it We revisit the details of the testing process later in this chapter

8 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-8 Outline Software Development Activities Identifying Classes and Objects Static Variables and Methods Class Relationships Interfaces Enumerated Types Revisited Method Design Testing GUI Design and Layout

9 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-9 Identifying Classes and Objects The core activity of object-oriented design is determining the classes and objects that will make up the solution The classes may be part of a class library, reused from a previous project, or newly written One way to identify potential classes is to identify the objects discussed in the requirements Objects are generally nouns, and the services that an object provides are generally verbs

10 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-10 Identifying Classes and Objects A partial requirements document: The user must be allowed to specify each product by its primary characteristics, including its name and product number. If the bar code does not match the product, then an error should be generated to the message window and entered into the error log. The summary report of all transactions must be structured as specified in section 7.A. Of course, not all nouns will correspond to a class or object in the final solution

11 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-11 Identifying Classes and Objects Remember that a class represents a group (classification) of objects with the same behaviors Generally, classes that represent objects should be given names that are singular nouns Examples: Coin, Student, Message A class represents the concept of one such object We are free to instantiate as many of each object as needed

12 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-12 Identifying Classes and Objects Sometimes it is challenging to decide whether something should be represented as a class For example, should an employee's address be represented as a set of instance variables or as an Address object The more you examine the problem and its details the more clear these issues become When a class becomes too complex, it often should be decomposed into multiple smaller classes to distribute the responsibilities

13 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-13 Identifying Classes and Objects We want to define classes with the proper amount of detail For example, it may be unnecessary to create separate classes for each type of appliance in a house It may be sufficient to define a more general Appliance class with appropriate instance data It all depends on the details of the problem being solved

14 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-14 Identifying Classes and Objects Part of identifying the classes we need is the process of assigning responsibilities to each class Every activity that a program must accomplish must be represented by one or more methods in one or more classes We generally use verbs for the names of methods In early stages it is not necessary to determine every method of every class – begin with primary responsibilities and evolve the design

15 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-15 Outline Software Development Activities Identifying Classes and Objects Static Variables and Methods Class Relationships Interfaces Enumerated Types Revisited Method Design Testing GUI Design and Layout

16 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-16 Static Class Members Recall that a static method is one that can be invoked through its class name For example, the methods of the Math class are static: result = Math.sqrt(25) Variables can be static as well Determining if a method or variable should be static is an important design decision

17 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-17 The static Modifier We declare static methods and variables using the static modifier It associates the method or variable with the class rather than with an object of that class Static methods are sometimes called class methods and static variables are sometimes called class variables Let's carefully consider the implications of each

18 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-18 Static Variables Normally, each object has its own data space, but if a variable is declared as static, only one copy of the variable exists private static float price; Memory space for a static variable is created when the class is first referenced All objects instantiated from the class share its static variables Changing the value of a static variable in one object changes it for all others

19 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-19 Static Methods class Helper { public static int cube (int num) { return num * num * num; } Because it is declared as static, the method can be invoked as value = Helper.cube(5);

20 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-20 Static Class Members The order of the modifiers can be interchanged, but by convention visibility modifiers come first Recall that the main method is static – it is invoked by the Java interpreter without creating an object Static methods cannot reference instance variables because instance variables don't exist until an object exists However, a static method can reference static variables or local variables

21 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-21 Static Class Members Static methods and static variables often work together The following example keeps track of how many Slogan objects have been created using a static variable, and makes that information available using a static method See SloganCounter.java (page 299)SloganCounter.java See Slogan.java (page 300)Slogan.java

22 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-22 //******************************************************************** // Slogan.java // Represents a single slogan string. //******************************************************************** public class Slogan { private String phrase; private static int count = 0; //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Constructor: Sets up the slogan and counts the number of // instances created. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public Slogan (String str) { phrase = str; count++; } //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Returns this slogan as a string. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public String toString() { return phrase; } //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Returns the number of instances of this class that have been // created. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public static int getCount () { return count; } }

23 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-23 //******************************************************************** // SloganCounter.java // Demonstrates the use of the static modifier. //******************************************************************** public class SloganCounter { //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Creates several Slogan objects and prints the number of // objects that were created. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public static void main (String[] args) { Slogan obj; obj = new Slogan ("Remember the Alamo."); System.out.println (obj); obj = new Slogan ("Don't Worry. Be Happy."); System.out.println (obj); obj = new Slogan ("Live Free or Die."); System.out.println (obj); obj = new Slogan ("Talk is Cheap."); System.out.println (obj); obj = new Slogan ("Write Once, Run Anywhere."); System.out.println (obj); System.out.println(); System.out.println ("Slogans created: " + Slogan.getCount()); } }

24 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-24 Outline Software Development Activities Identifying Classes and Objects Static Variables and Methods Class Relationships Interfaces Enumerated Types Revisited Method Design Testing GUI Design and Layout

25 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-25 Class Relationships Classes in a software system can have various types of relationships to each other Three of the most common relationships:  Dependency: A uses B  Aggregation: A has-a B  Inheritance: A is-a B Let's discuss dependency and aggregation further Inheritance is discussed in detail in Chapter 8

26 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-26 Dependency A dependency exists when one class relies on another in some way, usually by invoking the methods of the other We've seen dependencies in many previous examples We don't want numerous or complex dependencies among classes Nor do we want complex classes that don't depend on others A good design strikes the right balance

27 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-27 Dependency Some dependencies occur between objects of the same class A method of the class may accept an object of the same class as a parameter For example, the concat method of the String class takes as a parameter another String object str3 = str1.concat(str2); This drives home the idea that the service is being requested from a particular object

28 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-28 Dependency The following example defines a class called Rational to represent a rational number A rational number is a value that can be represented as the ratio of two integers Some methods of the Rational class accept another Rational object as a parameter See RationalTester.java (page 302)RationalTester.java See RationalNumber.java (page 304)RationalNumber.java

29 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-29 // RationalTester.java // Driver to exercise the use of multiple Rational objects. public class RationalTester { //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Creates some rational number objects and performs various // operations on them. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public static void main (String[] args) { RationalNumber r1 = new RationalNumber (6, 8); RationalNumber r2 = new RationalNumber (1, 3); RationalNumber r3, r4, r5, r6, r7; System.out.println ("First rational number: " + r1); System.out.println ("Second rational number: " + r2); if (r1.equals(r2)) System.out.println ("r1 and r2 are equal."); else System.out.println ("r1 and r2 are NOT equal."); r3 = r1.reciprocal(); System.out.println ("The reciprocal of r1 is: " + r3); r4 = r1.add(r2); r5 = r1.subtract(r2); r6 = r1.multiply(r2); r7 = r1.divide(r2); System.out.println ("r1 + r2: " + r4); System.out.println ("r1 - r2: " + r5); System.out.println ("r1 * r2: " + r6); System.out.println ("r1 / r2: " + r7); } }

30 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-30 // RationalNumber.java // Represents one rational number with a numerator and denominator. //******************************************************************** public class RationalNumber { private int numerator, denominator; // Constructor: Sets up the rational number by ensuring a nonzero // denominator and making only the numerator signed. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public RationalNumber (int numer, int denom) { if (denom == 0) denom = 1; // Make the numerator "store" the sign if (denom < 0) { numer = numer *( -1); denom = denom * (-1); } numerator = numer; denominator = denom; reduce(); } //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Returns the numerator of this rational number. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public int getNumerator () { return numerator; } //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Returns the denominator of this rational number. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public int getDenominator () { return denominator; }

31 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-31 // Returns the reciprocal of this rational number. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public RationalNumber reciprocal () { return new RationalNumber (denominator, numerator); } // Adds this rational number to the one passed as a parameter. // A common denominator is found by multiplying the individual // denominators. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public RationalNumber add (RationalNumber op2) { int commonDenominator = denominator * op2.getDenominator(); int numerator1 = numerator * op2.getDenominator(); int numerator2 = op2.getNumerator() * denominator; int sum = numerator1 + numerator2; return new RationalNumber (sum, commonDenominator); } // Subtracts the rational number passed as a parameter from this // rational number. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public RationalNumber subtract (RationalNumber op2) { int commonDenominator = denominator * op2.getDenominator(); int numerator1 = numerator * op2.getDenominator(); int numerator2 = op2.getNumerator() * denominator; int difference = numerator1 - numerator2; return new RationalNumber (difference, commonDenominator); } // Multiplies this rational number by the one passed as a // parameter. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public RationalNumber multiply (RationalNumber op2) { int numer = numerator * op2.getNumerator(); int denom = denominator * op2.getDenominator(); return new RationalNumber (numer, denom); }

32 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-32 // Divides this rational number by the one passed as a parameter // by multiplying by the reciprocal of the second rational. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public RationalNumber divide (RationalNumber op2) { return multiply (op2.reciprocal()); } // Determines if this rational number is equal to the one passed // as a parameter. Assumes they are both reduced. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public boolean equals (RationalNumber op2) { return ( numerator == op2.getNumerator() && denominator == op2.getDenominator() ); } // Returns this rational number as a string. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public String toString () { String result; if (numerator == 0) result = "0"; else if (denominator == 1) result = numerator + ""; else result = numerator + "/" + denominator; return result; } // Reduces this rational number by dividing both the numerator // and the denominator by their greatest common divisor. //----------------------------------------------------------------- private void reduce () { if (numerator != 0) { int common = gcd (Math.abs(numerator), denominator); numerator = numerator / common; denominator = denominator / common; } }

33 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-33 //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Computes and returns the greatest common divisor of the two // positive parameters. Uses Euclid's algorithm. //----------------------------------------------------------------- private int gcd (int num1, int num2) { while (num1 != num2) if (num1 > num2) num1 = num1 - num2; else num2 = num2 - num1; return num1; } }

34 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-34 Aggregation An aggregate is an object that is made up of other objects Therefore aggregation is a has-a relationship  A car has a chassis In software, an aggregate object contains references to other objects as instance data The aggregate object is defined in part by the objects that make it up This is a special kind of dependency – the aggregate usually relies on the objects that compose it

35 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-35 Aggregation In the following example, a Student object is composed, in part, of Address objects A student has an address (in fact each student has two addresses) See StudentBody.java (page 309)StudentBody.java See Student.java (page 311)Student.java See Address.java (page 312)Address.java An aggregation association is shown in a UML class diagram using an open diamond at the aggregate end

36 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-36 //******************************************************************** // StudentBody.java // // Demonstrates the use of an aggregate class. //******************************************************************** public class StudentBody { //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Creates some Address and Student objects and prints them. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public static void main (String[] args) { Address school = new Address ("800 Lancaster Ave.", "Villanova", "PA", 19085); Address jHome = new Address ("21 Jump Street", "Lynchburg", "VA", 24551); Student john = new Student ("John", "Smith", jHome, school); Address mHome = new Address ("123 Main Street", "Euclid", "OH", 44132); Student marsha = new Student ("Marsha", "Jones", mHome, school); System.out.println (john); System.out.println (); System.out.println (marsha); } }

37 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-37 //******************************************************************** // Student.java / // Represents a college student. //******************************************************************** public class Student { private String firstName, lastName; private Address homeAddress, schoolAddress; //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Constructor: Sets up this student with the specified values. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public Student (String first, String last, Address home, Address school) { firstName = first; lastName = last; homeAddress = home; schoolAddress = school; } //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Returns a string description of this Student object. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public String toString() { String result; result = firstName + " " + lastName + "\n"; result += "Home Address:\n" + homeAddress + "\n"; result += "School Address:\n" + schoolAddress; return result; } }

38 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-38 // Address.java // // Represents a street address. //******************************************************************** public class Address { private String streetAddress, city, state; private long zipCode; //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Constructor: Sets up this address with the specified data. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public Address (String street, String town, String st, long zip) { streetAddress = street; city = town; state = st; zipCode = zip; } //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Returns a description of this Address object. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public String toString() { String result; result = streetAddress + "\n"; result += city + ", " + state + " " + zipCode; return result; } }

39 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-39 Aggregation in UML StudentBody + main (args : String[]) : void + toString() : String Student - firstName : String - lastName : String - homeAddress : Address - schoolAddress : Address + toString() : String - streetAddress : String - city : String - state : String - zipCode : long Address

40 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-40 The this Reference The this reference allows an object to refer to itself That is, the this reference, used inside a method, refers to the object through which the method is being executed Suppose the this reference is used in a method called tryMe, which is invoked as follows: obj1.tryMe(); obj2.tryMe(); In the first invocation, the this reference refers to obj1 ; in the second it refers to obj2

41 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-41 The this reference The this reference can be used to distinguish the instance variables of a class from corresponding method parameters with the same names The constructor of the Account class (from Chapter 4) could have been written as follows: public Account (Sring name, long acctNumber, double balance) { this.name = name; this.acctNumber = acctNumber; this.balance = balance; }

42 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-42 Outline Software Development Activities Identifying Classes and Objects Static Variables and Methods Class Relationships Interfaces Enumerated Types Revisited Method Design Testing GUI Design and Layout

43 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-43 Interfaces A Java interface is a collection of abstract methods and constants An abstract method is a method header without a method body An abstract method can be declared using the modifier abstract, but because all methods in an interface are abstract, usually it is left off An interface is used to establish a set of methods that a class will implement

44 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-44 Interfaces public interface Doable { public void doThis(); public int doThat(); public void doThis2 (float value, char ch); public boolean doTheOther (int num); } interface is a reserved word None of the methods in an interface are given a definition (body) A semicolon immediately follows each method header

45 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-45 Interfaces An interface cannot be instantiated Methods in an interface have public visibility by default A class formally implements an interface by:  stating so in the class header  providing implementations for each abstract method in the interface If a class asserts that it implements an interface, it must define all methods in the interface

46 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-46 Interfaces public class CanDo implements Doable { public void doThis () { // whatever } public void doThat () { // whatever } // etc. } implements is a reserved word Each method listed in Doable is given a definition

47 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-47 Interfaces A class that implements an interface can implement other methods as well See Complexity.javaComplexity.java See Question.javaQuestion.java See MiniQuiz.javaMiniQuiz.java In addition to (or instead of) abstract methods, an interface can contain constants When a class implements an interface, it gains access to all its constants

48 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-48 // Complexity.java // Represents the interface for an object that can be //assigned an explicit complexity. public interface Complexity { public void setComplexity (int complexity); public int getComplexity(); }

49 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-49 // Question.java // Represents a question (and its answer). public class Question implements Complexity { private String question, answer; private int complexityLevel; //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Constructor: Sets up the question with a default complexity. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public Question (String query, String result) { question = query; answer = result; complexityLevel = 1; } //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Sets the complexity level for this question. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public void setComplexity (int level) { complexityLevel = level; } //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Returns the complexity level for this question. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public int getComplexity() { return complexityLevel; } //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Returns the question. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public String getQuestion() { return question; }

50 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-50 // Returns the answer to this question. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public String getAnswer() { return answer; } //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Returns true if the candidate answer matches the answer. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public boolean answerCorrect (String candidateAnswer) { return answer.equals(candidateAnswer); } //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Returns this question (and its answer) as a string. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public String toString() { return question + "\n" + answer; } }

51 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-51 // MiniQuiz.java // Demonstrates the use of a class that implements an interface. import java.util.Scanner; public class MiniQuiz { //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Presents a short quiz. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public static void main (String[] args) { Question q1, q2; String possible; Scanner scan = new Scanner (System.in); q1 = new Question ("What is the capital of Jamaica?", "Kingston"); q1.setComplexity (4); q2 = new Question ("Which is worse, ignorance or apathy?", "I don't know and I don't care"); q2.setComplexity (10); System.out.print (q1.getQuestion()); System.out.println (" (Level: " + q1.getComplexity() + ")"); possible = scan.nextLine(); if (q1.answerCorrect(possible)) System.out.println ("Correct"); else System.out.println ("No, the answer is " + q1.getAnswer()); System.out.println(); System.out.print (q2.getQuestion()); System.out.println (" (Level: " + q2.getComplexity() + ")"); possible = scan.nextLine(); if (q2.answerCorrect(possible)) System.out.println ("Correct"); else System.out.println ("No, the answer is " + q2.getAnswer()); } }

52 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-52 Interfaces A class can implement multiple interfaces The interfaces are listed in the implements clause The class must implement all methods in all interfaces listed in the header class ManyThings implements interface1, interface2 { // all methods of both interfaces }

53 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-53 Interfaces The Java standard class library contains many helpful interfaces The Comparable interface contains one abstract method called compareTo, which is used to compare two objects We discussed the compareTo method of the String class in Chapter 5 The String class implements Comparable, giving us the ability to put strings in lexicographic order

54 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-54 The Comparable Interface Any class can implement Comparable to provide a mechanism for comparing objects of that type if (obj1.compareTo(obj2) < 0) System.out.println ("obj1 is less than obj2"); The value returned from compareTo should be negative is obj1 is less that obj2, 0 if they are equal, and positive if obj1 is greater than obj2 When a programmer designs a class that implements the Comparable interface, it should follow this intent

55 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-55 The Comparable Interface It's up to the programmer to determine what makes one object less than another For example, you may define the compareTo method of an Employee class to order employees by name (alphabetically) or by employee number The implementation of the method can be as straightforward or as complex as needed for the situation

56 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-56 The Iterator Interface As we discussed in Chapter 5, an iterator is an object that provides a means of processing a collection of objects one at a time An iterator is created formally by implementing the Iterator interface, which contains three methods The hasNext method returns a boolean result – true if there are items left to process The next method returns the next object in the iteration The remove method removes the object most recently returned by the next method

57 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-57 The Iterator Interface By implementing the Iterator interface, a class formally establishes that objects of that type are iterators The programmer must decide how best to implement the iterator functions Once established, the for-each version of the for loop can be used to process the items in the iterator

58 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-58 Interfaces You could write a class that implements certain methods (such as compareTo ) without formally implementing the interface ( Comparable ) However, formally establishing the relationship between a class and an interface allows Java to deal with an object in certain ways Interfaces are a key aspect of object-oriented design in Java We discuss this idea further in Chapter 9

59 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-59 Outline Software Development Activities Identifying Classes and Objects Static Variables and Methods Class Relationships Interfaces Enumerated Types Revisited Method Design Testing GUI Design and Layout

60 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-60 Enumerated Types In Chapter 3 we introduced enumerated types, which define a new data type and list all possible values of that type enum Season {winter, spring, summer, fall} Once established, the new type can be used to declare variables Season time; The only values this variable can be assigned are the ones established in the enum definition

61 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-61 Enumerated Types An enumerated type definition is a special kind of class The values of the enumerated type are objects of that type For example, fall is an object of type Season That's why the following assignment is valid time = Season.fall;

62 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-62 Enumerated Types An enumerated type definition can be more interesting than a simple list of values Because they are like classes, we can add additional instance data and methods We can define an enum constructor as well Each value listed for the enumerated type calls the constructor See Season.javaSeason.java See SeasonTester.javaSeasonTester.java

63 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-63 // Season.java // // Enumerates the values for Season. //******************************************************************** public enum Season { winter ("December through February"), spring ("March through May"), summer ("June through August"), fall ("September through November"); private String span; //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Constructor: Sets up each value with an associated string. //----------------------------------------------------------------- Season (String months) { span = months; } //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Returns the span message for this value. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public String getSpan() { return span; } }

64 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-64 // SeasonTester.java // // Demonstrates the use of a full enumerated type. //******************************************************************** public class SeasonTester { //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Iterates through the values of the Season enumerated type. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public static void main (String[] args) { for (Season time : Season.values()) System.out.println (time + "\t" + time.getSpan()); } }

65 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-65 Enumerated Types Every enumerated type contains a static method called values that returns a list of all possible values for that type The list returned from values is an iterator, so a for loop can be used to process them easily An enumerated type cannot be instantiated outside of its own definition A carefully designed enumerated type provides a versatile and type-safe mechanism for managing data

66 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-66 Outline Software Development Activities Identifying Classes and Objects Static Variables and Methods Class Relationships Interfaces Enumerated Types Revisited Method Design Testing GUI Design and Layout

67 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-67 Method Design As we've discussed, high-level design issues include:  identifying primary classes and objects  assigning primary responsibilities After establishing high-level design issues, its important to address low-level issues such as the design of key methods For some methods, careful planning is needed to make sure they contribute to an efficient and elegant system design

68 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-68 Method Design An algorithm is a step-by-step process for solving a problem Examples: a recipe, travel directions Every method implements an algorithm that determines how the method accomplishes its goals An algorithm may be expressed in pseudocode, a mixture of code statements and English that communicate the steps to take

69 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-69 Method Decomposition A method should be relatively small, so that it can be understood as a single entity A potentially large method should be decomposed into several smaller methods as needed for clarity A public service method of an object may call one or more private support methods to help it accomplish its goal Support methods might call other support methods if appropriate

70 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-70 Method Decomposition Let's look at an example that requires method decomposition – translating English into Pig Latin Pig Latin is a language in which each word is modified by moving the initial sound of the word to the end and adding "ay" Words that begin with vowels have the "yay" sound added on the end bookookbaytableabletay itemitemyaychairairchay

71 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-71 Method Decomposition The primary objective (translating a sentence) is too complicated for one method to accomplish Therefore we look for natural ways to decompose the solution into pieces Translating a sentence can be decomposed into the process of translating each word The process of translating a word can be separated into translating words that:  begin with vowels  begin with consonant blends (sh, cr, th, etc.)  begin with single consonants

72 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-72 Method Decomposition See PigLatin.javaPigLatin.java See PigLatinTranslator.javaPigLatinTranslator.java In a UML class diagram, the visibility of a variable or method can be shown using special characters Public members are preceded by a plus sign Private members are preceded by a minus sign

73 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-73 // PigLatin.java // Demonstrates the concept of method decomposition. //******************************************************************** import java.util.Scanner; public class PigLatin { //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Reads sentences and translates them into Pig Latin. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public static void main (String[] args) { String sentence, result, another; Scanner scan = new Scanner (System.in); do { System.out.println (); System.out.println ("Enter a sentence (no punctuation):"); sentence = scan.nextLine(); System.out.println (); result = PigLatinTranslator.translate (sentence); System.out.println ("That sentence in Pig Latin is:"); System.out.println (result); System.out.println (); System.out.print ("Translate another sentence (y/n)? "); another = scan.nextLine(); } while (another.equalsIgnoreCase("y")); } }

74 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-74 // PigLatinTranslator. java // Represents a translator from English to Pig Latin. Demonstrates // method decomposition. import java.util.Scanner; public class PigLatinTranslator { // Translates a sentence of words into Pig Latin. public static String translate (String sentence) { String result = ""; Scanner scan = new Scanner (sentence); sentence = sentence.toLowerCase(); while (scan.hasNext()) { result += translateWord (scan.next()); result += " "; } return result; } // Translates one word into Pig Latin. If the word begins with a // vowel, the suffix "yay" is appended to the word. Otherwise, // the first letter or two are moved to the end of the word, // and "ay" is appended. //----------------------------------------------------------------- private static String translateWord (String word) { String result = ""; if (beginsWithVowel(word)) result = word + "yay"; else if (beginsWithBlend(word)) result = word.substring(2) + word.substring(0,2) + "ay"; else result = word.substring(1) + word.charAt(0) + "ay"; return result; }

75 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-75 //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Determines if the specified word begins with a vowel. //----------------------------------------------------------------- private static boolean beginsWithVowel (String word) { String vowels = "aeiou"; char letter = word.charAt(0); return (vowels.indexOf(letter) != -1); } //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Determines if the specified word begins with a particular // two-character consonant blend. //----------------------------------------------------------------- private static boolean beginsWithBlend (String word) { return ( word.startsWith ("bl") || word.startsWith ("sc") || word.startsWith ("br") || word.startsWith ("sh") || word.startsWith ("ch") || word.startsWith ("sk") || word.startsWith ("cl") || word.startsWith ("sl") || word.startsWith ("cr") || word.startsWith ("sn") || word.startsWith ("dr") || word.startsWith ("sm") || word.startsWith ("dw") || word.startsWith ("sp") || word.startsWith ("fl") || word.startsWith ("sq") || word.startsWith ("fr") || word.startsWith ("st") || word.startsWith ("gl") || word.startsWith ("sw") || word.startsWith ("gr") || word.startsWith ("th") || word.startsWith ("kl") || word.startsWith ("tr") || word.startsWith ("ph") || word.startsWith ("tw") || word.startsWith ("pl") || word.startsWith ("wh") || word.startsWith ("pr") || word.startsWith ("wr") ); } }

76 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-76 Class Diagram for Pig Latin PigLatin + main (args : String[]) : void + translate (sentence : String) : String - translateWord (word : String) : String - beginsWithVowel (word : String) : boolean - beginsWithBlend (word : String) : boolean PigLatinTranslator

77 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-77 Objects as Parameters Another important issue related to method design involves parameter passing Parameters in a Java method are passed by value A copy of the actual parameter (the value passed in) is stored into the formal parameter (in the method header) Therefore passing parameters is similar to an assignment statement When an object is passed to a method, the actual parameter and the formal parameter become aliases of each other

78 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-78 Passing Objects to Methods What a method does with a parameter may or may not have a permanent effect (outside the method) See ParameterTester.javaParameterTester.java See ParameterModifier.javaParameterModifier.java See Num.javaNum.java Note the difference between changing the internal state of an object versus changing which object a reference points to

79 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-79 // ParameterTester.java // // Demonstrates the effects of passing various types of parameters. //******************************************************************** public class ParameterTester { //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Sets up three variables (one primitive and two objects) to // serve as actual parameters to the changeValues method. Prints // their values before and after calling the method. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public static void main (String[] args) { ParameterModifier modifier = new ParameterModifier(); int a1 = 111; Num a2 = new Num (222); Num a3 = new Num (333); System.out.println ("Before calling changeValues:"); System.out.println ("a1\ta2\ta3"); System.out.println (a1 + "\t" + a2 + "\t" + a3 + "\n"); modifier.changeValues (a1, a2, a3); System.out.println ("After calling changeValues:"); System.out.println ("a1\ta2\ta3"); System.out.println (a1 + "\t" + a2 + "\t" + a3 + "\n"); } }

80 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-80 // ParameterModifier.java // Demonstrates the effects of changing parameter values. //******************************************************************** public class ParameterModifier { //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Modifies the parameters, printing their values before and // after making the changes. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public void changeValues (int f1, Num f2, Num f3) { System.out.println ("Before changing the values:"); System.out.println ("f1\tf2\tf3"); System.out.println (f1 + "\t" + f2 + "\t" + f3 + "\n"); f1 = 999; f2.setValue(888); f3 = new Num (777); System.out.println ("After changing the values:"); System.out.println ("f1\tf2\tf3"); System.out.println (f1 + "\t" + f2 + "\t" + f3 + "\n"); } }

81 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-81 // Num.java // Represents a single integer as an object. //******************************************************************** public class Num { private int value; //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Sets up the new Num object, storing an initial value. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public Num (int update) { value = update; } //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Sets the stored value to the newly specified value. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public void setValue (int update) { value = update; } //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Returns the stored integer value as a string. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public String toString () { return value + “ "; } }

82 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-82 Method Overloading Method overloading is the process of giving a single method name multiple definitions If a method is overloaded, the method name is not sufficient to determine which method is being called The signature of each overloaded method must be unique The signature includes the number, type, and order of the parameters

83 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-83 Method Overloading The compiler determines which method is being invoked by analyzing the parameters float tryMe(int x) { return x +.375; } float tryMe(int x, float y) { return x*y; } result = tryMe(25, 4.32) Invocation

84 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-84 Method Overloading The println method is overloaded: println (String s) println (int i) println (double d) and so on... The following lines invoke different versions of the println method: System.out.println ("The total is:"); System.out.println (total);

85 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-85 Overloading Methods The return type of the method is not part of the signature That is, overloaded methods cannot differ only by their return type Constructors can be overloaded Overloaded constructors provide multiple ways to initialize a new object

86 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-86 Outline Software Development Activities Identifying Classes and Objects Static Variables and Methods Class Relationships Interfaces Enumerated Types Revisited Method Design Testing GUI Design and Layout

87 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-87 Testing Testing can mean many different things It certainly includes running a completed program with various inputs It also includes any evaluation performed by human or computer to assess quality Some evaluations should occur before coding even begins The earlier we find an problem, the easier and cheaper it is to fix

88 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-88 Testing The goal of testing is to find errors As we find and fix errors, we raise our confidence that a program will perform as intended We can never really be sure that all errors have been eliminated So when do we stop testing?  Conceptual answer: Never  Snide answer: When we run out of time  Better answer: When we are willing to risk that an undiscovered error still exists

89 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-89 Reviews A review is a meeting in which several people examine a design document or section of code It is a common and effective form of human-based testing Presenting a design or code to others:  makes us think more carefully about it  provides an outside perspective Reviews are sometimes called inspections or walkthroughs

90 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-90 Test Cases A test case is a set of input and user actions, coupled with the expected results Often test cases are organized formally into test suites which are stored and reused as needed For medium and large systems, testing must be a carefully managed process Many organizations have a separate Quality Assurance (QA) department to lead testing efforts

91 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-91 Defect and Regression Testing Defect testing is the execution of test cases to uncover errors The act of fixing an error may introduce new errors After fixing a set of errors we should perform regression testing – running previous test suites to ensure new errors haven't been introduced It is not possible to create test cases for all possible input and user actions Therefore we should design tests to maximize their ability to find problems

92 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-92 Black-Box Testing In black-box testing, test cases are developed without considering the internal logic They are based on the input and expected output Input can be organized into equivalence categories Two input values in the same equivalence category would produce similar results Therefore a good test suite will cover all equivalence categories and focus on the boundaries between categories

93 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-93 White-Box Testing White-box testing focuses on the internal structure of the code The goal is to ensure that every path through the code is tested Paths through the code are governed by any conditional or looping statements in a program A good testing effort will include both black-box and white-box tests

94 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-94 Outline Software Development Activities Identifying Classes and Objects Static Variables and Methods Class Relationships Interfaces Enumerated Types Revisited Method Design Testing GUI Design and Layout

95 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-95 GUI Design We must remember that the goal of software is to help the user solve the problem To that end, the GUI designer should:  Know the user  Prevent user errors  Optimize user abilities  Be consistent Let's discuss each of these in more detail

96 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-96 Know the User Knowing the user implies an understanding of:  the user's true needs  the user's common activities  the user's level of expertise in the problem domain and in computer processing We should also realize these issues may differ for different users Remember, to the user, the interface is the program

97 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-97 Prevent User Errors Whenever possible, we should design user interfaces that minimize possible user mistakes We should choose the best GUI components for each task For example, in a situation where there are only a few valid options, using a menu or radio buttons would be better than an open text field Error messages should guide the user appropriately

98 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-98 Optimize User Abilities Not all users are alike – some may be more familiar with the system than others Knowledgeable users are sometimes called power users We should provide multiple ways to accomplish a task whenever reasonable  "wizards" to walk a user through a process  short cuts for power users Help facilities should be available but not intrusive

99 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-99 Be Consistent Consistency is important – users get used to things appearing and working in certain ways Colors should be used consistently to indicate similar types of information or processing Screen layout should be consistent from one part of a system to another For example, error messages should appear in consistent locations

100 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-100 Layout Managers A layout manager is an object that determines the way that components are arranged in a container There are several predefined layout managers defined in the Java standard class library: Defined in the AWT Defined in Swing Flow Layout Border Layout Card Layout Grid Layout GridBag Layout Box Layout Overlay Layout

101 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-101 Layout Managers Every container has a default layout manager, but we can explicitly set the layout manager as well Each layout manager has its own particular rules governing how the components will be arranged Some layout managers pay attention to a component's preferred size or alignment, while others do not A layout manager attempts to adjust the layout as components are added and as containers are resized

102 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-102 Layout Managers We can use the setLayout method of a container to change its layout manager JPanel panel = new JPanel(); panel.setLayout(new BorderLayout()); The following example uses a tabbed pane, a container which permits one of several panes to be selected See LayoutDemo.java (page 343) LayoutDemo.java See IntroPanel.java (page 344) IntroPanel.java

103 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-103 // LayoutDemo.java // // Demonstrates the use of flow, border, grid, and box layouts. //******************************************************************** import javax.swing.*; public class LayoutDemo { //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Sets up a frame containing a tabbed pane. The panel on each // tab demonstrates a different layout manager. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public static void main (String[] args) { JFrame frame = new JFrame ("Layout Manager Demo"); frame.setDefaultCloseOperation (JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE); JTabbedPane tp = new JTabbedPane(); tp.addTab ("Intro", new IntroPanel()); tp.addTab ("Flow", new FlowPanel()); tp.addTab ("Border", new BorderPanel()); tp.addTab ("Grid", new GridPanel()); tp.addTab ("Box", new BoxPanel()); frame.getContentPane().add(tp); frame.pack(); frame.setVisible(true); } }

104 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-104 // IntroPanel.java // // Represents the introduction panel for the LayoutDemo program. //******************************************************************** import java.awt.*; import javax.swing.*; public class IntroPanel extends JPanel { //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Sets up this panel with two labels. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public IntroPanel() { setBackground (Color.green); JLabel l1 = new JLabel ("Layout Manager Demonstration"); JLabel l2 = new JLabel ("Choose a tab to see an example of " + "a layout manager."); add (l1); add (l2); } }

105 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-105 Flow Layout Flow layout puts as many components as possible on a row, then moves to the next row Rows are created as needed to accommodate all of the components Components are displayed in the order they are added to the container Each row of components is centered horizontally in the window by default, but could also be aligned left or right Also, the horizontal and vertical gaps between the components can be explicitly set See FlowPanel.java (page 346) FlowPanel.java

106 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-106 // FlowPanel.java // // Represents the panel in the LayoutDemo program that demonstrates // the flow layout manager. //******************************************************************** import java.awt.*; import javax.swing.*; public class FlowPanel extends JPanel { //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Sets up this panel with some buttons to show how flow layout // affects their position. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public FlowPanel () { setLayout (new FlowLayout()); setBackground (Color.green); JButton b1 = new JButton ("BUTTON 1"); JButton b2 = new JButton ("BUTTON 2"); JButton b3 = new JButton ("BUTTON 3"); JButton b4 = new JButton ("BUTTON 4"); JButton b5 = new JButton ("BUTTON 5"); add (b1); add (b2); add (b3); add (b4); add (b5); } }

107 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-107 Border Layout A border layout defines five areas into which components can be added North South CenterEastWest

108 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-108 Border Layout Each area displays one component (which could be a container such as a JPanel ) Each of the four outer areas enlarges as needed to accommodate the component added to it If nothing is added to the outer areas, they take up no space and other areas expand to fill the void The center area expands to fill space as needed See BorderPanel.java (page 349) BorderPanel.java

109 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-109 // BorderPanel.java // // Represents the panel in the LayoutDemo program that demonstrates // the border layout manager. //******************************************************************** import java.awt.*; import javax.swing.*; public class BorderPanel extends JPanel { //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Sets up this panel with a button in each area of a border // layout to show how it affects their position, shape, and size. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public BorderPanel() { setLayout (new BorderLayout()); setBackground (Color.green); JButton b1 = new JButton ("BUTTON 1"); JButton b2 = new JButton ("BUTTON 2"); JButton b3 = new JButton ("BUTTON 3"); JButton b4 = new JButton ("BUTTON 4"); JButton b5 = new JButton ("BUTTON 5"); add (b1, BorderLayout.CENTER); add (b2, BorderLayout.NORTH); add (b3, BorderLayout.SOUTH); add (b4, BorderLayout.EAST); add (b5, BorderLayout.WEST); } }

110 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-110 Grid Layout A grid layout presents a container’s components in a rectangular grid of rows and columns One component is placed in each cell of the grid, and all cells have the same size As components are added to the container, they fill the grid from left-to-right and top-to-bottom (by default) The size of each cell is determined by the overall size of the container See GridPanel.java (page 352) GridPanel.java

111 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-111 // GridPanel.java // // Represents the panel in the LayoutDemo program that demonstrates // the grid layout manager. //******************************************************************** import java.awt.*; import javax.swing.*; public class GridPanel extends JPanel { //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Sets up this panel with some buttons to show how grid // layout affects their position, shape, and size. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public GridPanel() { setLayout (new GridLayout (2, 3)); setBackground (Color.green); JButton b1 = new JButton ("BUTTON 1"); JButton b2 = new JButton ("BUTTON 2"); JButton b3 = new JButton ("BUTTON 3"); JButton b4 = new JButton ("BUTTON 4"); JButton b5 = new JButton ("BUTTON 5"); add (b1); add (b2); add (b3); add (b4); add (b5); } }

112 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-112 Box Layout A box layout organizes components horizontally (in one row) or vertically (in one column) Components are placed top-to-bottom or left-to- right in the order in which they are added to the container By combining multiple containers using box layout, many different configurations can be created Multiple containers with box layouts are often preferred to one container that uses the more complicated gridbag layout manager

113 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-113 Box Layout Invisible components can be added to a box layout container to take up space between components  Rigid areas have a fixed size  Glue specifies where excess space should go A rigid area is created using the createRigidArea method of the Box class Glue is created using the createHorizontalGlue or createVerticalGlue methods See BoxPanel.java (page 355) BoxPanel.java

114 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-114 // BoxPanel.java // // Represents the panel in the LayoutDemo program that demonstrates // the box layout manager. //******************************************************************** import java.awt.*; import javax.swing.*; public class BoxPanel extends JPanel { //----------------------------------------------------------------- // Sets up this panel with some buttons to show how a vertical // box layout (and invisible components) affects their position. //----------------------------------------------------------------- public BoxPanel() { setLayout (new BoxLayout (this, BoxLayout.Y_AXIS)); setBackground (Color.green); JButton b1 = new JButton ("BUTTON 1"); JButton b2 = new JButton ("BUTTON 2"); JButton b3 = new JButton ("BUTTON 3"); JButton b4 = new JButton ("BUTTON 4"); JButton b5 = new JButton ("BUTTON 5"); add (b1); add (Box.createRigidArea (new Dimension (0, 10))); add (b2); add (Box.createVerticalGlue()); add (b3); add (b4); add (Box.createRigidArea (new Dimension (0, 20))); add (b5); } }

115 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-115 Borders A border can be put around any Swing component to define how the edges of the component should be drawn Borders can be used effectively to group components visually The BorderFactory class contains several static methods for creating border objects A border is applied to a component using the setBorder method

116 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-116 Borders An empty border  buffers the space around the edge of a component  otherwise has no visual effect A line border  surrounds the component with a simple line  the line's color and thickness can be specified An etched border  creates the effect of an etched groove around a component  uses colors for the highlight and shadow

117 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-117 Borders A bevel border  can be raised or lowered  uses colors for the outer and inner highlights and shadows A titled border  places a title on or around the border  the title can be oriented in many ways A matte border  specifies the sizes of the top, left, bottom, and right edges of the border separately  uses either a solid color or an image

118 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-118 Borders A compound border  is a combination of two borders  one or both of the borders can be a compound border See BorderDemo.java (page 358) BorderDemo.java

119 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-119 // BorderDemo.java // Demonstrates the use of various types of borders. import java.awt.*; import javax.swing.*; import javax.swing.border.*; public class BorderDemo { // Creates several bordered panels and displays them. public static void main (String[] args) { JFrame frame = new JFrame ("Border Demo"); frame.setDefaultCloseOperation (JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE); JPanel panel = new JPanel(); panel.setLayout (new GridLayout (0, 2, 5, 10)); panel.setBorder (BorderFactory.createEmptyBorder (8, 8, 8, 8)); JPanel p1 = new JPanel(); p1.setBorder (BorderFactory.createLineBorder (Color.red, 3)); p1.add (new JLabel ("Line Border")); panel.add (p1); JPanel p2 = new JPanel(); p2.setBorder (BorderFactory.createEtchedBorder ()); p2.add (new JLabel ("Etched Border")); panel.add (p2); JPanel p3 = new JPanel(); p3.setBorder (BorderFactory.createRaisedBevelBorder ()); p3.add (new JLabel ("Raised Bevel Border")); panel.add (p3); JPanel p4 = new JPanel(); p4.setBorder (BorderFactory.createLoweredBevelBorder ()); p4.add (new JLabel ("Lowered Bevel Border")); panel.add (p4); JPanel p5 = new JPanel(); p5.setBorder (BorderFactory.createTitledBorder ("Title")); p5.add (new JLabel ("Titled Border")); panel.add (p5); JPanel p6 = new JPanel(); TitledBorder tb = BorderFactory.createTitledBorder ("Title"); tb.setTitleJustification (TitledBorder.RIGHT); p6.setBorder (tb); p6.add (new JLabel ("Titled Border (right)")); panel.add (p6); JPanel p7 = new JPanel(); Border b1 = BorderFactory.createLineBorder (Color.blue, 2); Border b2 = BorderFactory.createEtchedBorder (); p7.setBorder (BorderFactory.createCompoundBorder (b1, b2)); p7.add (new JLabel ("Compound Border")); panel.add (p7); JPanel p8 = new JPanel(); Border mb = BorderFactory.createMatteBorder (1, 5, 1, 1, Color.red); p8.setBorder (mb); p8.add (new JLabel ("Matte Border")); panel.add (p8); frame.getContentPane().add (panel); frame.pack(); frame.setVisible(true); } }

120 © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved6-120 Summary has focused on:  software development activities  determining the classes and objects that are needed for a program  the relationships that can exist among classes  the static modifier  writing interfaces  the design of enumerated type classes  method design and method overloading  GUI design and layout managers


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